\p Leviticus 18.0: \p Leviticus 18.1: \p Leviticus 18.2: \p Leviticus 18.3: \p Leviticus 18.4: \p Leviticus 18.5: \p Leviticus 18.6: \p Leviticus 18.7: \p Leviticus 18.8: \p Leviticus 18.9: \p Leviticus 18.10: \p Leviticus 18.11: \p Leviticus 18.12: \p Leviticus 18.13: \p Leviticus 18.14: \p Leviticus 18.15: \p Leviticus 18.16: \p Leviticus 18.17: \p Leviticus 18.18: \p Leviticus 18.19: \p Leviticus 18.20: \p Leviticus 18.21: \p Leviticus 18.22: \p Leviticus 18.23: \p Leviticus 18.24: \p Leviticus 18.25: \p Leviticus 18.26: \p Leviticus 18.27: \p Leviticus 18.28: \p Leviticus 18.29: \p Leviticus 18.30: \p Job 6.0: \c 6 \p \p Job 6.1: \v 1 Then Job answered, \q1 \p Job 6.2: \v 2 “Oh that my anguish were weighed, \q2 and all my calamity laid in the balances! \q1 \p Job 6.3: \v 3 For now it would be heavier than the sand of the seas, \q2 therefore have my words been rash. \q1 \p Job 6.4: \v 4 For the arrows of the Almighty are within me. \q2 My spirit drinks up their poison. \q1 The terrors of God set themselves in array against me. \q2 \p Job 6.5: \v 5 Does the wild donkey bray when he has grass? \q1 Or does the ox low over his fodder? \q2 \p Job 6.6: \v 6 Can that which has no flavor be eaten without salt? \q1 Or is there any taste in the white of an egg? \q2 \p Job 6.7: \v 7 My soul refuses to touch them. \q1 They are as loathsome food to me. \b \q1 \p Job 6.8: \v 8 “Oh that I might have my request, \q2 that God would grant the thing that I long for, \q1 \p Job 6.9: \v 9 even that it would please God to crush me; \q2 that he would let loose his hand, and cut me off! \q1 \p Job 6.10: \v 10 Let still be my consolation, \q2 yes, let me exult in pain that doesn’t spare, \q2 that I have not denied the words of the Holy One. \q1 \p Job 6.11: \v 11 What is my strength, that I should wait? \q2 What is my end, that I should be patient? \q1 \p Job 6.12: \v 12 Is my strength the strength of stones? \q2 Or is my flesh of bronze? \q1 \p Job 6.13: \v 13 Isn’t it that I have no help in me, \q2 That wisdom is driven quite from me? \b \q1 \p Job 6.14: \v 14 “To him who is ready to faint, kindness should be shown from his friend; \q2 even to him who forsakes the fear of the Almighty. \q1 \p Job 6.15: \v 15 My brothers have dealt deceitfully as a brook, \q2 as the channel of brooks that pass away; \q1 \p Job 6.16: \v 16 Which are black by reason of the ice, \q2 in which the snow hides itself. \q1 \p Job 6.17: \v 17 In the dry season, they vanish. \q2 When it is hot, they are consumed out of their place. \q1 \p Job 6.18: \v 18 The caravans that travel beside them turn away. \q2 They go up into the waste, and perish. \q1 \p Job 6.19: \v 19 The caravans of Tema looked. \q2 The companies of Sheba waited for them. \q1 \p Job 6.20: \v 20 They were distressed because they were confident. \q2 They came there, and were confounded. \q1 \p Job 6.21: \v 21 For now you are nothing. \q2 You see a terror, and are afraid. \q1 \p Job 6.22: \v 22 Did I say, ‘Give to me?’ \q2 or, ‘Offer a present for me from your substance?’ \q1 \p Job 6.23: \v 23 or, ‘Deliver me from the adversary’s hand?’ \q2 or, ‘Redeem me from the hand of the oppressors?’ \b \q1 \p Job 6.24: \v 24 “Teach me, and I will hold my peace. \q2 Cause me to understand my error. \q1 \p Job 6.25: \v 25 How forcible are words of uprightness! \q2 But your reproof, what does it reprove? \q1 \p Job 6.26: \v 26 Do you intend to reprove words, \q2 since the speeches of one who is desperate are as wind? \q1 \p Job 6.27: \v 27 Yes, you would even cast lots for the fatherless, \q2 and make merchandise of your friend. \q1 \p Job 6.28: \v 28 Now therefore be pleased to look at me, \q2 for surely I will not lie to your face. \q1 \p Job 6.29: \v 29 Please return. \q2 Let there be no injustice. \q2 Yes, return again. \q2 My cause is righteous. \q1 \p Job 6.30: \v 30 Is there injustice on my tongue? \q2 Can’t my taste discern mischievous things? \p Job 15.0: \c 15 \p \p Job 15.1: \v 1 Then Eliphaz the Temanite answered, \q1 \p Job 15.2: \v 2 “Should a wise man answer with vain knowledge, \q2 and fill himself with the east wind? \q1 \p Job 15.3: \v 3 Should he reason with unprofitable talk, \q2 or with speeches with which he can do no good? \q1 \p Job 15.4: \v 4 Yes, you do away with fear, \q2 and hinder devotion before God. \q1 \p Job 15.5: \v 5 For your iniquity teaches your mouth, \q2 and you choose the language of the crafty. \q1 \p Job 15.6: \v 6 Your own mouth condemns you, and not I. \q2 Yes, your own lips testify against you. \b \q1 \p Job 15.7: \v 7 “Are you the first man who was born? \q2 Or were you brought out before the hills? \q1 \p Job 15.8: \v 8 Have you heard the secret counsel of God? \q2 Do you limit wisdom to yourself? \q1 \p Job 15.9: \v 9 What do you know that we don’t know? \q2 What do you understand which is not in us? \q1 \p Job 15.10: \v 10 With us are both the gray-headed and the very aged men, \q2 much elder than your father. \q1 \p Job 15.11: \v 11 Are the consolations of God too small for you, \q2 even the word that is gentle toward you? \q1 \p Job 15.12: \v 12 Why does your heart carry you away? \q2 Why do your eyes flash, \q1 \p Job 15.13: \v 13 That you turn your spirit against God, \q2 and let such words go out of your mouth? \q1 \p Job 15.14: \v 14 What is man, that he should be clean? \q2 What is he who is born of a woman, that he should be righteous? \q1 \p Job 15.15: \v 15 Behold, he puts no trust in his holy ones. \q2 Yes, the heavens are not clean in his sight; \q1 \p Job 15.16: \v 16 how much less one who is abominable and corrupt, \q2 a man who drinks iniquity like water! \b \q1 \p Job 15.17: \v 17 “I will show you, listen to me; \q2 that which I have seen I will declare \q1 \p Job 15.18: \v 18 (which wise men have told by their fathers, \q2 and have not hidden it; \q1 \p Job 15.19: \v 19 to whom alone the land was given, \q2 and no stranger passed among them): \q1 \p Job 15.20: \v 20 the wicked man writhes in pain all his days, \q2 even the number of years that are laid up for the oppressor. \q1 \p Job 15.21: \v 21 A sound of terrors is in his ears. \q2 In prosperity the destroyer will come on him. \q1 \p Job 15.22: \v 22 He doesn’t believe that he will return out of darkness. \q2 He is waited for by the sword. \q1 \p Job 15.23: \v 23 He wanders abroad for bread, saying, ‘Where is it?’ \q2 He knows that the day of darkness is ready at his hand. \q1 \p Job 15.24: \v 24 Distress and anguish make him afraid. \q2 They prevail against him, as a king ready to the battle. \q1 \p Job 15.25: \v 25 Because he has stretched out his hand against God, \q2 and behaves himself proudly against the Almighty, \q1 \p Job 15.26: \v 26 he runs at him with a stiff neck, \q2 with the thick shields of his bucklers, \q1 \p Job 15.27: \v 27 because he has covered his face with his fatness, \q2 and gathered fat on his thighs. \q1 \p Job 15.28: \v 28 He has lived in desolate cities, \q2 in houses which no one inhabited, \q2 which were ready to become heaps. \q1 \p Job 15.29: \v 29 He will not be rich, neither will his substance continue, \q2 neither will their possessions be extended on the earth. \q1 \p Job 15.30: \v 30 He will not depart out of darkness. \q2 The flame will dry up his branches. \q2 He will go away by the breath of God’s mouth. \q1 \p Job 15.31: \v 31 Let him not trust in emptiness, deceiving himself; \q2 for emptiness will be his reward. \q1 \p Job 15.32: \v 32 It will be accomplished before his time. \q2 His branch will not be green. \q1 \p Job 15.33: \v 33 He will shake off his unripe grape as the vine, \q2 and will cast off his flower as the olive tree. \q1 \p Job 15.34: \v 34 For the company of the godless will be barren, \q2 and fire will consume the tents of bribery. \q1 \p Job 15.35: \v 35 They conceive mischief, and produce iniquity. \q2 Their heart prepares deceit.” \b \p Job 25.0: \c 25 \p \p Job 25.1: \v 1 Then Bildad the Shuhite answered, \q1 \p Job 25.2: \v 2 “Dominion and fear are with him. \q2 He makes peace in his high places. \q1 \p Job 25.3: \v 3 Can his armies be counted? \q2 On whom does his light not arise? \q1 \p Job 25.4: \v 4 How then can man be just with God? \q2 Or how can he who is born of a woman be clean? \q1 \p Job 25.5: \v 5 Behold, even the moon has no brightness, \q2 and the stars are not pure in his sight; \q1 \p Job 25.6: \v 6 How much less man, who is a worm, \q2 the son of man, who is a worm!” \p Job 35.0: \c 35 \p \p Job 35.1: \v 1 Moreover Elihu answered, \q1 \p Job 35.2: \v 2 “Do you think this to be your right, \q2 or do you say, ‘My righteousness is more than God’s,’ \q1 \p Job 35.3: \v 3 that you ask, ‘What advantage will it be to you? \q2 What profit will I have, more than if I had sinned?’ \q1 \p Job 35.4: \v 4 I will answer you, \q2 and your companions with you. \q1 \p Job 35.5: \v 5 Look to the skies, and see. \q2 See the skies, which are higher than you. \q1 \p Job 35.6: \v 6 If you have sinned, what effect do you have against him? \q2 If your transgressions are multiplied, what do you do to him? \q1 \p Job 35.7: \v 7 If you are righteous, what do you give him? \q2 Or what does he receive from your hand? \q1 \p Job 35.8: \v 8 Your wickedness may hurt a man as you are, \q2 and your righteousness may profit a son of man. \b \q1 \p Job 35.9: \v 9 “By reason of the multitude of oppressions they cry out. \q2 They cry for help by reason of the arm of the mighty. \q1 \p Job 35.10: \v 10 But no one says, ‘Where is God my Maker, \q2 who gives songs in the night, \q1 \p Job 35.11: \v 11 who teaches us more than the animals of the earth, \q2 and makes us wiser than the birds of the sky?’ \q1 \p Job 35.12: \v 12 There they cry, but no one answers, \q2 because of the pride of evil men. \q1 \p Job 35.13: \v 13 Surely God will not hear an empty cry, \q2 neither will the Almighty regard it. \q1 \p Job 35.14: \v 14 How much less when you say you don’t see him. \q2 The cause is before him, and you wait for him! \q1 \p Job 35.15: \v 15 But now, because he has not visited in his anger, \q2 neither does he greatly regard arrogance. \q1 \p Job 35.16: \v 16 Therefore Job opens his mouth with empty talk, \q2 and he multiplies words without knowledge.” \b \p Job 37.0: \c 37 \q1 \p Job 37.1: \v 1 “Yes, at this my heart trembles, \q2 and is moved out of its place. \q1 \p Job 37.2: \v 2 Hear, oh, hear the noise of his voice, \q2 the sound that goes out of his mouth. \q1 \p Job 37.3: \v 3 He sends it out under the whole sky, \q2 and his lightning to the ends of the earth. \q1 \p Job 37.4: \v 4 After it a voice roars. \q2 He thunders with the voice of his majesty. \q2 He doesn’t hold back anything when his voice is heard. \q1 \p Job 37.5: \v 5 God thunders marvelously with his voice. \q2 He does great things, which we can’t comprehend. \q1 \p Job 37.6: \v 6 For he says to the snow, ‘Fall on the earth,’ \q2 likewise to the shower of rain, \q2 and to the showers of his mighty rain. \q1 \p Job 37.7: \v 7 He seals up the hand of every man, \q2 that all men whom he has made may know it. \q1 \p Job 37.8: \v 8 Then the animals take cover, \q2 and remain in their dens. \q1 \p Job 37.9: \v 9 Out of its room comes the storm, \q2 and cold out of the north. \q1 \p Job 37.10: \v 10 By the breath of God, ice is given, \q2 and the width of the waters is frozen. \q1 \p Job 37.11: \v 11 Yes, he loads the thick cloud with moisture. \q2 He spreads abroad the cloud of his lightning. \q1 \p Job 37.12: \v 12 It is turned around by his guidance, \q2 that they may do whatever he commands them \q2 on the surface of the habitable world, \q1 \p Job 37.13: \v 13 Whether it is for correction, or for his land, \q2 or for loving kindness, that he causes it to come. \b \q1 \p Job 37.14: \v 14 “Listen to this, Job. \q2 Stand still, and consider the wondrous works of God. \q1 \p Job 37.15: \v 15 Do you know how God controls them, \q2 and causes the lightning of his cloud to shine? \q1 \p Job 37.16: \v 16 Do you know the workings of the clouds, \q2 the wondrous works of him who is perfect in knowledge? \q1 \p Job 37.17: \v 17 You whose clothing is warm, \q2 when the earth is still by reason of the south wind? \q1 \p Job 37.18: \v 18 Can you, with him, spread out the sky, \q2 which is strong as a cast metal mirror? \q1 \p Job 37.19: \v 19 Teach us what we will tell him, \q2 for we can’t make our case by reason of darkness. \q1 \p Job 37.20: \v 20 Will it be told him that I would speak? \q2 Or should a man wish that he were swallowed up? \b \q1 \p Job 37.21: \v 21 Now men don’t see the light which is bright in the skies, \q2 but the wind passes, and clears them. \q1 \p Job 37.22: \v 22 Out of the north comes golden splendor. \q2 With God is awesome majesty. \q1 \p Job 37.23: \v 23 We can’t reach the Almighty. \q2 He is exalted in power. \q2 In justice and great righteousness, he will not oppress. \q1 \p Job 37.24: \v 24 Therefore men revere him. \q2 He doesn’t regard any who are wise of heart.” \b \p Jeremiah 24.0: \c 24 \p \p Jeremiah 24.1: \v 1 Yahweh showed me, and behold, two baskets of figs were set before Yahweh’s temple, after Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon had carried away captive Jeconiah the son of Jehoiakim, king of Judah, and the princes of Judah, with the craftsmen and smiths, from Jerusalem, and had brought them to Babylon. \p Jeremiah 24.2: \v 2 One basket had very good figs, like the figs that are first-ripe; and the other basket had very bad figs, which could not be eaten, they were so bad. \p \p Jeremiah 24.3: \v 3 Then Yahweh asked me, “What do you see, Jeremiah?” \p I said, “Figs. The good figs are very good, and the bad are very bad, so bad that can’t be eaten.” \p \p Jeremiah 24.4: \v 4 Yahweh’s word came to me, saying, \p Jeremiah 24.5: \v 5 “Yahweh, the God of Israel says: ‘Like these good figs, so I will regard the captives of Judah, whom I have sent out of this place into the land of the Chaldeans, for good. \p Jeremiah 24.6: \v 6 For I will set my eyes on them for good, and I will bring them again to this land. I will build them, and not pull them down. I will plant them, and not pluck them up. \p Jeremiah 24.7: \v 7 I will give them a heart to know me, that I am Yahweh. They will be my people, and I will be their God; for they will return to me with their whole heart. \p \p Jeremiah 24.8: \v 8 “‘As the bad figs, which can’t be eaten, they are so bad,’ surely Yahweh says, ‘So I will give up Zedekiah the king of Judah, and his princes, and the remnant of Jerusalem, who remain in this land, and those who dwell in the land of Egypt. \p Jeremiah 24.9: \v 9 I will even give them up to be tossed back and forth among all the kingdoms of the earth for evil; to be a reproach and a proverb, a taunt and a curse, in all places where I will drive them. \p Jeremiah 24.10: \v 10 I will send the sword, the famine, and the pestilence, among them, until they are consumed from off the land that I gave to them and to their fathers.’” \p John 2.0: \p John 2.1: \p John 2.2: \p John 2.3: \p John 2.4: \p John 2.5: \p John 2.6: \p John 2.7: \p John 2.8: \p John 2.9: \p John 2.10: \p John 2.11: \p John 2.12: \p John 2.13: \p John 2.14: \p John 2.15: \p John 2.16: \p John 2.17: \p John 2.18: \p John 2.19: \p John 2.20: \p John 2.21: \p John 2.22: \p John 2.23: \p John 2.24: \p John 2.25: